Interstellar Extinction Curve Variations Toward the Inner Milky Way: A Challenge to Observational Cosmology
David M. Nataf, Oscar A. Gonzalez, Luca Casagrande, Gail Zasowski,, Christopher Wegg, Christian Wolf, Andrea Kunder, Javier Alonso-Garcia, Dante, Minniti, Marina Rejkuba, Roberto K. Saito, Elena Valenti, Manuela Zoccali,, Radoslaw Poleski, Grzegorz Pietrzynski, Jan Skowron

TL;DR
This study reveals significant variations in interstellar extinction curves toward the inner Milky Way, challenging standard assumptions and potentially impacting cosmological distance measurements and dust mapping accuracy.
Contribution
It demonstrates that extinction curve variations are complex, involve multiple degrees of freedom, and are not fully captured by the parameter R_V, highlighting the need for revised models.
Findings
Extinction ratios vary by over 20% and are correlated.
Median A_V/A_Ks ratio is 60% higher than standard.
Reddening maps overestimate dust extinction by ~100%.
Abstract
We investigate interstellar extinction curve variations toward 4 deg of the inner Milky Way in photometry from the OGLE-III and surveys, with supporting evidence from diffuse interstellar bands and photometry. We obtain independent measurements toward 2,000 sightlines of , , , and , with median precision and accuracy of 2%. We find that the variations in the extinction ratios , and are large (exceeding 20%), significant, and positively correlated, as expected. However, both the mean values and the trends in these extinction ratios are drastically shifted from the predictions of Cardelli and Fitzpatrick, regardless of how is varied. Furthermore, we demonstrate that variations in the shape of the extinction curve has at least two degrees of freedom,…
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